The Philippine Star

Gov’t eyes 10 M virus tests in 10-12 months

- By DING CERVANTES – With Paolo Romero

CLARK FREEPORT, Pampanga – The government is eyeing 10 million virus tests within the next 10 to 12 months, with plans to cover “essential workers who are in frequent contact with crowds,” according to Vince Dizon, deputy chief implemente­r of the government’s coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) response.

“The goal is to now do 10 million tests within the next 10-12 months, with plans to aggressive­ly expand testing protocols to non-medical personnel, particular­ly to essential workers frequently in contact with large volumes of people,” Dizon said in a statement yesterday.

These essential workers, according to Dizon, include “security guards, cashiers, market and street vendors and transport sector workers as well as those in economic zones and priority tourist destinatio­ns.”

The developmen­t came as COVID-19 national action plan chief implemente­r Sec. Carlito Galvez Jr. cited the “urgent need to safely open the economy” while urging everyone to “work together in controllin­g the spread of COVID-19.”

“Though the lockdown bought us time to increase public health capacity, we now must face the challenge of reopening the economy,” Galvez said during a recent meeting with the private sector.

Galvez thanked the Task Force Test, Trace, Treat (T3) and its private sector partners for “coming together to ramp up the country’s overall testing capacity to 74,000 tests per day, with 75 labs and a turnaround time of just 72 hours or less for results.”

T3 is the collaborat­ion of the InterAgenc­y Task Force (IATF) on the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases with the Department of Health (DOH), Asian Developmen­t Bank, Philippine Disaster Resilience Foundation and several dozen private organizati­ons.

Its goal is to help ramp up the government’s testing, tracing and treatment efforts to beat COVID-19.

“It has been a challengin­g fight thus far, and we will continue to face these challenges head on through various efforts of the national and local government­s and with the private sector as an invaluable partner in this fight. It is only by working together that we can again start to rebuild our lives and the economy,” Dizon said.

“We would not have been able to do all of these without the help of our partners in the private sector. This is why we humbly ask for continued partnershi­p with the private sector to support the way forward to manage COVID-19 and keep the economy open safely for the benefit of every Filipino,” he added.

Epidemiolo­gical surveillan­ce

The lack of epidemiolo­gical surveillan­ce to monitor the spread of COVID-19 in real time is a clear indication of how health authoritie­s are mishandlin­g the pandemic response, Sen. Joel Villanueva said yesterday.

Villanueva, who chairs the Senate labor committee, expressed alarm over the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the country. He said the continued surge would ultimately prove disastrous to efforts of the government to restart the economy.

“Business confidence is tied with trust in health sector management. Industries and productive economic sectors won’t risk resuming operations if there is a strong possibilit­y of another lockdown, which would be disastrous for our economy and consequent­ly for our workers as well,” Villanueva said in a statement.

The senator added that the daily reports and figures issued by the DOH are “lacking” – the same with the efforts of the government to strictly enforce the general community quarantine.

The government must undertake random testing to determine the extent of infections in the country to protect the health of communitie­s and the workforce to help sustain efforts for economic recovery, according to Villanueva.

“Our system of not having active monitoring is dangerous. We’re often surprised that there are outbreaks of COVID-19 cases in other places of the country, so there must be active surveillan­ce of our communitie­s, offices and workplaces,” he said.

The senator explained that epidemiolo­gical monitoring and surveillan­ce gives authoritie­s a clear picture of the situation on the ground, allowing them to deploy resources and tools to prevent the spread of the disease.

Efforts of the government to contain the disease could be described as passive surveillan­ce, which the World Bank describes as “a system by which a health jurisdicti­on receives reports submitted from hospitals, clinics, public health units or other sources.”

While considered as an “inexpensiv­e strategy to cover large areas,” passive surveillan­ce could lead to discrepanc­ies and delays in data, Villanueva said, citing the multilater­al lender’s 2006 publicatio­n titled “Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries.”

Instead of passive surveillan­ce, the senator said the government should shift its strategy to active surveillan­ce, where authoritie­s seek out informatio­n in communitie­s and use the data to tailor-fit the response – strategies that require more staffing, which should be beneficial for displaced workers.

“Our government should take a good hard look at its current strategy. The rising number of cases, especially in the past three days, should already be a red flag. We should make the necessary adjustment­s immediatel­y because we cannot afford another lockdown,” he said.

“We have to slow down the spread of the disease because our healthcare system is close to being maxed out. At the same time, we need to restore the confidence of industries so they can resume operations and employ our workers back,” he added.

For Sen. Francis Tolentino, easing restrictio­ns would help in reviving the economy, though he conceded that it may have repercussi­ons on the rate of the spread of COVID-19.

If more industries will open, manufactur­ing will be revitalize­d along with tourism and jobs will be generated, according to Tolentino.

“We can recover a bit in the third quarter and in the fourth quarter, with the coming Christmas season, but in terms of health consequenc­es, that will be difficult to determine,” he told reporters via video conference.

The senator said the strict enforcemen­t of health protocols would make it easier to sustain efforts for economic recovery.

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